The Free Press
Think for Yourself in the Forum
ForumNewslettersSign InSubscribe
The LA Riots Are a Trump Ad
Protesters clash with the California National Guard on June 8, 2025, in Los Angeles, California. (Jason Armond/Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)
Americans don’t trust Democrats on immigration or law-and-order matters, and the party’s response to the disorder in LA isn’t helping.
By Ruy Teixeira
06.10.25 — California
--:--
--:--
Upgrade to Listen
Produced by ElevenLabs using AI narration
462
333
READ IN APP

As the riots in Los Angeles rage on, one question keeps going through my brain: Have Democrats learned anything?

The chaos in Southern California could have been designed in a lab to exploit Democratic weak spots, combining the issues of illegal immigration, crime, and public disorder. Yet their most visible response to the anti-deportation riots in Los Angeles has been to denounce President Trump for sending National Guard troops to quell the riots. The situation, they insist, is under control—or at least it was, until Trump intervened.

This view is not shared by some in charge of actually doing the quelling. As Los Angeles police chief Jim McDonnell admitted at a Sunday evening press conference: “We are overwhelmed. . . . Tonight, we had individuals out there shooting commercial-grade fireworks at our officers. . . that can kill you. . . . They’ll take backpacks filled with cinder blocks and hammers, break the blocks, and pass the pieces around to throw at officers and cars, and even at other people.”

Fourth of July sale
Limited Time Offer
Celebrate 250 years with $25 off an annual subscription.
Already have an account? Sign in
To read this article, sign in or subscribe
Ruy Teixeira
Ruy Teixeira is a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and the co-founder of the Substack The Liberal Patriot.
Tags:
Immigration
Crime
Democrats
Comments
Comments are closed. The conversation isn’t. Keep it going in The Free Press Forum.
Join the conversation
Share your thoughts and connect with other readers by becoming a paid subscriber!
Already a paid subscriber? Sign in

No posts

For Free People.
LatestSearchAboutCareersForumShopPodcastsVideoEvents
Download the app
Download on the Google Play Store
©2026 The Free Press. All Rights Reserved.Powered by Substack.
Privacy∙Terms∙Collection notice